Purpose of experiment

The pulse experiment is a demonstration of a reactor transient in a supercritical state, made possible by the inherently safe design of the TRIGA reactor. The aim of the experiment is to perform several pulses by rapidly withdrawing a control rod, measuring basic pulse parameters and experimentally validating the Fuchs-Hansen model.

Outcome / What you will learn
Students will:

  1. observe and understand the reactor response to a large sudden reactivity increase following the ejection of a control rod out of the reactor core
  2. experimentally verify the physical models describing the pulse experiment (the Fuchs-Hansen model)
Execution

After a discussion on the temperature reactivity effects and the Fuchs-Hansen model, students observe the behaviour of the reactor power and fuel temperature following sudden large insertions of reactivity, caused by the ejection of a control rod out of the reactor core. Students measure three pulse parameters: the maximum power, released energy and maximum fuel temperature, and observe their dependence to the prompt reactivity, thereby experimentally validating the Fuchs-Hansen model.

Exercise No. 10: Pulse experiment
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